Russian

In 2011 the competition continued between the highly consolidated large publishing houses, with an orientation toward mass-market fiction, and the smaller publishers, defenders of a more “elitist” conception of Russian literature. Uroki russkogo (“Russian Lessons”), an important series launched by KoLibri in 2010 with works by Anatoly Gavrilov, Vladislav Otroshchenko, and Oleg Zobern, ceased publication in 2011 owing to losses. Before doing so, however, it managed to release books by Nikolay Baytov and others. Perhaps the most significant publication in the series was Denis Osokin’s Ovsyanki (“Yellowhammers” [a type of bird]), a story collection and his second published book. Osokin was generally regarded as one of the most talented discoveries of the 21st century and was already well known because of the film adaptations that had been made of several of his stories, including Ovsyanki (2010). Osokin’s work was marked by an intense sensuality, a masterly style, and a subject matter that to many Russian readers was exotic: the contemporary survivors of the ancient Finno-Ugric and Turkic cultures of the Volga River (Osokin himself was a native of Kazan). Another noteworthy debut was produced by Ailuros, a small publishing house based in New York and directed by the poet Elena Suntsova; Ushi ot mertvogo Andryushi (“Dead Andryusha’s Ears”), written by the St. Petersburg author (and artist) Irina Glebova, was a remarkable revival of the novella form that was associated with Leningrad in the 1960s and ’70s. Finally, another debut, or in this case a pseudodebut, ought not to pass without comment: the publication by Limbus Press of two novels by the pseudonymous Figl-Migl: Shchaste (2010; “Happiness”) and Ty tak lyubish eti filmy (“You So Love These Films”). Although Limbus touted those works as the first of Figl-Migl’s to be published, three other novels had been published under that name in St. Petersburg journals since 1999. The latest of Figl-Migl’s works, Ty tak lyubish eti filmy, which played with several popular genres (including the detective novel and the urban fantasy), had been judged by some critics as less successful than the earlier works. It nevertheless came in second to Dmitry Bykov’s Ostromov; ili, uchenik charodeya (2010; “Ostromov; or, The Wizard’s Pupil”), about occultists in the Soviet Union of the 1920s, for the 2011 National Bestseller Prize.

Both the National Bestseller and the Russian Booker committees decided in 2011 to award a prize for the best work of the previous 10 years. The National Bestseller awarded its prize to Zakhar Prilepin for his 2007 Grekh (“Sin”). Prilepin’s work, intensely emotional and politically radical (he was a member of the outlawed National Bolshevik Party, although this did not prevent him from participating in Kremlin receptions for leading cultural figures), had long been the object of critical controversy; some saw his work as an eloquent expression of the times, whereas others saw it as aesthetically primitive. The 2011 Russian Booker was awarded only for the achievement of the decade. Initially there was strong support for Ruben David Gonsales Gallego, whose Beloe na chernom (2002; White on Black, 2006) had won the Russian Booker in 2003. In his book Gallego, a Russian of Spanish and Venezuelan extraction, described his experiences of having been disabled from birth and orphaned early in childhood. In 2011 he was critically injured in an accident in Washington, D.C. (where he lived). That circumstance provoked a flurry of letters calling for him to be awarded the Russian Booker of the Decade. When he regained consciousness, however, Gallego requested instead that he be put on the panel that determined the winner. The short list included Oleg Pavlov’s 2002 Booker winner Karagandinskiye devyatiny; ili, povest poslednikh dney (“Karaganda Commemorations; or, A Tale of the Last Days”), Zakhar Prilepin’s 2006 finalist Sankya, Roman Senchin’s 2009 finalist Yeltyshevy (“The Yeltyshevs”), Lyudmila Ulitskaya’s 2007 finalist Daniel Shtayn, perevodchik (Daniel Stein, Interpreter, 2011), and Aleksandr Chudakov’s 2001 finalist Lozhitsya mgla na staryye stupeni (A Gloom Is Cast upon the Ancient Steps, 2004– ). Chudakov was the winner.

The 2010 Andrey Bely Prize in poetry was awarded to Sergey Stratanovsky, a leading poet of the Leningrad underground of the 1970s and ’80s; to Anatoly Gavrilov for his minimalist prose; to the literary scholar Lyudmila Zubova for her studies of the language of contemporary Russian poetry; to Aleksey Prokopiev, a gifted translator of German Expressionist works; and to the directors of two publishing houses: Yevgeny Kolchuzhin of Vodoley and Sergey Kudryavtsev of Giley, whose houses published the collected works of two very talented deceased contemporary poets, Sergey Petrov (Vodoley) and Gennady Aygi (Giley).

The Russian Prize, given to Russian-language writers living abroad, was awarded in 2011 to, among others, the 75-year-old poet and human rights activist Natalya Gorbanevskaya. That award and her recent books bore witness to a burst of creative energy not usually associated with poets of advanced age. The Debut Prize for young writers underwent a change of rules in 2011 that extended the age limit from 25 to 35. As a result, the nominees included many mature and well-established writers.

Among new books of poetry for 2011 was a posthumous title from Elena Shvarts, Pereletnaya ptitsa (“The Migratory Bird”). Significant new works of poetry came from Oleg Yuryev, who lived in Frankfurt am Main, Ger.; Aleksandr Belyakov from Yaroslavl; Aleksey Porvin from St. Petersburg; Yekaterina Simonova from the Ural city of Nizhny Tagil; Polina Barskova, who taught at Hampshire College, Amherst, Mass.; Marianna Geyde, who lived in Moscow; Andrey Polyakov from the Crimea; and Ilya Rissenberg of Kharkiv, Ukr. The geographic diversity of the Russian muse was a fundamental sign of the times. Another such sign was the gradual loss of standing of the old-guard “thick journals” and their replacement by Web-based publications.

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